Why Planets Die — And What Keeps Earth Alive Right Now

 

Why Planets Die: The Secret Lifespan of Earth, Mars, and the Moon | Cosmic Truths

Why Planets Die — And What Keeps Earth Alive Right Now

The secret lifespan hidden inside every planet. A journey you won't forget.

Close your eyes for a second. Imagine you are floating in space. Below you, Earth glows blue and green — alive, breathing, spinning. Now look to your right. Mars. Red, silent, completely dead. No rivers. No trees. No sound.

What happened to Mars? And more importantly — will the same thing happen to Earth?

I came across a lecture by Huh Kyung-young that stopped me in my tracks. He didn't just talk about space like a scientist. He talked about it like someone who has seen the full picture — the birth, the life, and the death of planets. And honestly, some of the things he said gave me chills.

Let me walk you through it.

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Mars Was Once Just Like Earth

We think of Mars as a dead, dusty desert. But according to Huh Kyung-young, Mars was once a thriving planet. It had gravity. It had an atmosphere. It had an environment very similar to Earth's. Life existed there.

But it all ended.

"Mars and the Moon are 'retired' planets. They were once in their glory days, but they have declined due to age." — Huh Kyung-young

Think about that word — "retired." Not destroyed. Not hit by an asteroid. Retired. Like a star athlete whose body simply gave out after decades of peak performance. Mars didn't die from a disaster. It died from old age.

My Thoughts

This idea hit me hard. We spend so much time worrying about asteroids and alien invasions. But what if the real threat is simply time? What if every planet has an expiration date — and nobody told us?

The 100-Million-Degree Heater Inside Earth

So what keeps Earth alive right now? According to Huh Kyung-young, the answer is deep below your feet. About 7,600 kilometers deep, to be exact.

There is a core inside Earth. It burns at 100 million degrees. It is made of iron and other special elements. And this core does something incredible — it creates Earth's magnetic field.

The magnetic field is not just some science textbook concept. It is literally the reason you are breathing right now. This field creates the atmosphere — all eight layers of it, including the ozone layer, the stratosphere, and the ionosphere.

No core = No magnetic field = No atmosphere = No life.

Huh Kyung-young called it a "heater." And this heater has a lifespan — roughly 10 billion years. When it runs out, Earth goes cold. The atmosphere disappears. Oxygen stops being produced. And Earth becomes exactly like Mars.

"We are alive now because our heater is still burning." — Huh Kyung-young
My Thoughts

When I read this, I looked down at the ground beneath my feet differently. Right now, thousands of kilometers below me, there is a furnace hotter than anything humans have ever built. Every nuclear power plant on Earth is nothing compared to it. And it has been burning for billions of years — just to keep us alive. Doesn't that make you feel something?

What Happens When a Planet Dies?

Here is where it gets really wild. Huh Kyung-young described a cosmic recycling system that sounds like something out of the greatest science fiction movie ever made — except he says it's real.

When Earth's core finally dies and the planet becomes a cold, lifeless rock, it doesn't just float around forever. According to him, the old Earth gets pulled into a black hole. It disappears completely. Gone. Every mountain, every ocean, every city — swallowed into darkness.

But then something amazing happens.

A new planet emerges from a white hole.

"We essentially replace the engine of a small universe. A 'New Star' appears. The old Earth is pulled into a black hole and disappears completely, and a new, fiery star emerges." — Huh Kyung-young

He described the universe as following an eternal cycle: Formation → Existence → Destruction → Emptiness — and then it starts all over again. New planets are born. New suns are placed. New life begins.

My Thoughts

This is the part that made me forget I was sitting in my room reading a lecture transcript. Black holes aren't just destroyers — they are the universe's trash compactors. And white holes are the factories that build what comes next. Death and birth, happening at the same time, forever. If this is true, then nothing ever really ends. It just transforms.

3,628,800 Planets — All Built the Same Way

One of the most jaw-dropping claims in the lecture was this: there are exactly 3,628,800 planets that support life in the universe. And every single one of them has the same basic structure as Earth. Same type of core. Same 100-million-degree heat. Same magnetic field. Same eight-layer atmosphere.

It's like a cosmic blueprint. One design, repeated millions of times across the universe.

My Thoughts

Think about that number for a second. Over 3.6 million planets with life. We sit here on Earth debating whether aliens exist, and meanwhile — according to this perspective — there are millions of worlds out there with the exact same setup as ours. We might not be special. But we are definitely not alone.

The Moon, Mars, and Earth's Cosmic Balance

Someone asked Huh Kyung-young: "Does Mars also go into a black hole when it dies?"

His answer surprised me. No. Mars stays. The Moon stays. All eight planets in our solar system stay — because they serve a purpose. They exist to keep Earth in balance. Without them, Earth couldn't function properly.

"There are eight planets kept for the sake of Earth; they are physically necessary for balance." — Huh Kyung-young

So Mars isn't just a dead rock floating randomly in space. It's a retired worker that still holds the building up. The Moon isn't just a pretty light in the sky. It's part of the machinery that keeps you alive.

My Thoughts

This changed how I look at the night sky. Every planet I can see — Jupiter, Saturn, Mars — they're not just "out there." They're part of a system designed to support the planet I'm standing on. It's like finding out that every piece of furniture in your house was placed there on purpose, by someone who thought about it very carefully.

Life on the Moon — But Not Inside It

There is a popular theory that the Moon is hollow and has a giant base inside it. Huh Kyung-young shut that down immediately. Building inside the Moon would require impossible amounts of excavation. It's not practical.

But he did say something else. He confirmed that there are extraterrestrial beings on the Moon. Their civilization is far more advanced than ours. And the reason they don't interfere with Earth? They know a Divine Being is present here. So they keep their distance.

My Thoughts

Whether you believe in extraterrestrial beings or not, there's something fascinating about this idea. Advanced civilizations that choose NOT to interfere. Not because they can't — but because they respect something greater. In a world where powerful nations constantly interfere with weaker ones, maybe there's a lesson here about what true advanced civilization looks like.

The Mystery No Scientist Can Solve

Near the end of the lecture, someone asked Huh Kyung-young if modern science could explain the things he was describing. His answer was blunt.

"Scientists won't understand even if I show them." — Huh Kyung-young

He talked about energy that goes beyond what physics can measure. A kind of active energy that can stabilize matter, promote growth in plants, and even help heal the body. He said humans can see the results but will never fully understand the process behind it.

My Thoughts

I don't know if science will ever catch up to these ideas. But I do know this: 200 years ago, if you told someone that invisible waves could carry your voice across the ocean, they would have called you insane. Today we call it radio. Maybe the things that sound impossible now will be common knowledge in the future. Maybe we're just not ready yet.

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In the middle of our busy lives, how often do we stop and think about the age of the universe? About Mars? About black holes?

Our lives feel so small inside this enormous cosmos. But from heaven's point of view, each and every one of you is as precious as a star.

Even when life gets hard, remember — someone above is watching over you. Stay strong. Keep going.

I love you all. ♥

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